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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 294: F170-F176, 2008. First published October 24, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00285.2007
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Promoter methylation is associated with the age-dependent loss of N-cadherin in the rat kidney

Adebayo D. Akintola,1 Zachary L. Crislip,1 Jeffrey M. Catania,2 Gang Chen,1 Warren E. Zimmer,1 Robert C. Burghardt,2 and Alan R. Parrish1

1Department of Systems Biology and Translational Medicine, College of Medicine, Texas A&M Health Science Center; and 2Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University

Submitted 22 June 2007 ; accepted in final form 23 October 2007

The cadherins are cell adhesion molecules required for cellular homeostasis, and N-cadherin is the predominant cadherin expressed in proximal tubular epithelial cells in humans and rats. Our laboratory previously reported an age-dependent decrease in renal N-cadherin expression; the levels of N-cadherin mRNA and protein expression decreased in parallel, implicating a transcriptional mechanism in the age-dependent loss of expression (19). In this study, we examined the hypothesis that promoter hypermethylation underlies the loss of N-cadherin expression in aging rat kidney. We cloned the 5' flanking region of the rat N-cadherin gene and observed basic promoter activity in a 3,992-bp region localized immediately upstream of the ATG start site. Nucleotide analysis revealed 87% identity with the human N-cadherin minimal promoter region. Consistent with a role for regulation by DNA methylation, we found that a dense CpG island, which spans 1,104 bp (–1,158 to –55), flanks the rat N-cadherin gene; a similar CpG profile was found in the human N-cadherin 5' flanking region. Methylation-specific PCR analysis demonstrated that the promoter region of N-cadherin is heavily methylated in aged, but not young, rat kidney. Interestingly, the promoter is not methylated in age-matched, calorically restricted animals. In contrast, the promoter region is not methylated in either young or aged rat liver; this corresponds to the finding that aging is not associated with decreased N-cadherin expression in the liver. In addition, N-cadherin expression is markedly induced in NRK-52E cells treated with the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, further suggesting that methylation at CpG in the promoter region may underlie the age-dependent decrease in renal N-cadherin expression.

aging; caloric restriction; adherens junction



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: A. R. Parrish, Systems Biology and Translational Medicine, College of Medicine, Texas A&M Health Science Center, College Station, TX 77843-1114 (e-mail: parrish{at}medicine.tamhsc.edu)




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